The volume comprises two parts, focusing respectively on theory and practice. The psychological constructs discussed are well-known in the discipline, but this approach to conceptualization will be entirely new to many. The ideas are challenging but important. Readers will benefit from the editors' contextualizing framework, and deep knowledge of chaos theory and its mathematics is not necessary to grasp the applicability of nonlinear dynamics to psychology in practice.

B. C. Beins, CHOICE

The pandemic, and our response to it, have shown how unpredictable, irrational, illogical, suddenly changing, and muddled human interactions can be in a time of crisis. How can we make sense of such confusing and baffling behavior? This book reveals how chaos and nonlinear dynamics can bring new understanding to everyday topics in social sciences. It brings together chapters from leaders at the intersection of psychology and chaos and complexity theories. Conceptual and user-friendly, it is built around six themes: 1) Seeing nonlinearity, 2) Finding patterns, 3) using Simple models, 4) Intervening nonlinearly, and 6) teaching a new Worldview. It takes no specialized study-although there is more sophisticated material and optional math for those wishing it. The techie will, in addition, find concepts and diagrams to ponder. The volume is engaging, at times startling-whether about the weather, Internet, organizations, family dynamics, health, evolution, or falling in love. It reveals how many social, personal, clinical, research, and life phenomena become understandable and can be modelled in the light of Nonlinear Dynamical Systems (NDS) theory. It even offers a broadening worldview, happening already in other sciences, toward a more dynamic, interconnected, and evolving picture, including process-oriented appreciation of one's own experience. The book offers those in the field of psychology and the social sciences a stunning new perspective on human behaviour.
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The pandemic, and our response to it, has shown how unpredictable, irrational, illogical, suddenly changing, and muddled human interactions can be in a time of crisis. How can we make sense of such confusing and baffling behavior? This book reveals how chaos and nonlinear dynamics might be the answer, bringing new understanding to everyday topics in social sciences.
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Contributors Foreword (David Schuldberg) Acknowledgements Introduction: David Schuldberg, Ruth Richards, Shan Guisinger: Six Ways to See and Work in a Nonlinear Dynamical Systems (NDS) World SECTION I: Through a Nonlinear Lens Introduction to Section I 1 David Schuldberg Nonlinear Dynamics: The Creative Missing Link in Wellness 2 Riane Eisler: Psycho-Social Attractors and Human Well-being: Nonlinearity in Cultural Evolution 3 Ruth Richards: Creativity, Chaos, Complexity, and Healthy Change 4 Shan Guisinger: Human Nature and Chaos 5 Stephen J. Guastello: Chaos as a Construct in Psychology: A History 6 Allan Combs: Emergence of States of Consciousness: Exploring Self-Organization 7 Frederick David Abraham: In the Garden of Chaos: Visualizing Dynamics 8 A CONVERSATION with Stanley Krippner: Changes in Psychology, Chaos Theory, and Complexity Theory in the Last 25 Years Ruth Richards: Intermezzo. Look again: Five Issues Reframed Using Chaos and Complexity Theory SECTION II: Shifts and Deeper Visions Introduction to Section II 9 Tobi Zausner: Embracing the Infinite: Creativity and the Nonlinear Self 10 David Loye: Darwin and the Human Future 11 Terry Marks-Tarlow: Intuition in a Nonlinear World 12 Shan Guisinger: Evolution, Chaos Theory, Narrative, and Dreaming: The Case of Anorexia Nervosa 13 Keith Owen, A. Steven Dietz, and Ralph Gohring: Strategies for Creating the Learning Organization 14 Seana Moran: Life Purpose and Intentionally Being Creative: A Cultural-Ecological Feedback-Loop Perspective 15 Frederick David Abraham: In the Garden of Chaos: Visualizing Networks 16 A CONVERSATION with Melanie Mitchell: The Second Nonlinear Revolution. Getting the Word Out: Education for a New Era (and sign up for an SFI MOOC) David Schuldberg, Ruth Richards, and Shan Guisinger: Integration and Conclusions. Nonlinear Dynamics in Psychology: Six Themes, Four Ps, and the Third Culture Author Index Subject Index
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"The volume comprises two parts, focusing respectively on theory and practice. The psychological constructs discussed are well-known in the discipline, but this approach to conceptualization will be entirely new to many. The ideas are challenging but important. Readers will benefit from the editors' contextualizing framework, and deep knowledge of chaos theory and its mathematics is not necessary to grasp the applicability of nonlinear dynamics to psychology in practice." -- B. C. Beins, CHOICE
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David Schuldberg received a B.A. in Social Relations from Harvard, and M.A. and Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology from UC Berkeley. He joined the University of Montana's Psychology Department in 1984, doing teaching, clinical supervision, and research. He was also evaluation director at the National Native Children's Trauma Center. Research areas focus on physical and psychological heath, nonlinear data analysis, assessment and evaluation, and rural minority health care. He is interested in training effective workers for rural health and well-being. Across areas, he is interested in "meta-methodology," choosing methods that work best "here," moving tools from one problem to new ones. Ruth Richards is educational psychologist and psychiatrist, affiliated with Saybrook University (Creativity Studies, Consciousness, Spirituality, Integrative Health) and Integral and Transpersonal Psychology, California Institute of Integral Studies. She has studied Everyday Creativity in diverse settings (www.DrRuthRichards.com), authored/co-authored/edited multiple books, articles, and the Lifetime Creativity Scales. She is Fellow of the American Psychological Association, Arnheim Award winner for Lifetime Accomplishment (Aesthetics, Creativity, and the Arts) and is on editorial boards of two journals. Her 2018 book, Everyday Creativity and the Healthy Mind: Dynamic New Paths for Self and Society, won a Silver Nautilus Award ("Better Books for a Better World"). Shan Guisinger is a researcher and clinician with 30 years of experience studying and treating eating disorders. She received her Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley and completed postdoctoral work at the Yale Eating Disorders Clinic. In her research and practice she seeks to understand how biological, psychological, and social factors interact in complex systems to create or ameliorate problems. She has taught her approach in the US and Italy. Shan has authored articles for Psychological Review and American Psychologist on evolution, anorexia, and interpersonal relatedness. Her treatment manual will be published by American Psychological Association Press in 2022.
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Selling point: Provides an accessible introduction to the fascinating and increasingly important areas of chaos and complexity Selling point: Gives the reader insights into the history of Nonlinear Dynamical Systens Theory (NDS), showing how NDS can be applied across a range of psychological scenarios Selling point: Includes interviews with experts in the field Selling point: Requires no background mathematical knowlege
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780190465025
Publisert
2022
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Inc; Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
839 gr
Høyde
152 mm
Bredde
231 mm
Dybde
28 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
448

Om bidragsyterne

David Schuldberg received a B.A. in Social Relations from Harvard, and M.A. and Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology from UC Berkeley. He joined the University of Montana's Psychology Department in 1984, doing teaching, clinical supervision, and research. He was also evaluation director at the National Native Children's Trauma Center. Research areas focus on physical and psychological heath, nonlinear data analysis, assessment and evaluation, and rural minority health care. He is interested in training effective workers for rural health and well-being. Across areas, he is interested in "meta-methodology," choosing methods that work best "here," moving tools from one problem to new ones. Ruth Richards is educational psychologist and psychiatrist, affiliated with Saybrook University (Creativity Studies, Consciousness, Spirituality, Integrative Health) and Integral and Transpersonal Psychology, California Institute of Integral Studies. She has studied Everyday Creativity in diverse settings (www.DrRuthRichards.com), authored/co-authored/edited multiple books, articles, and the Lifetime Creativity Scales. She is Fellow of the American Psychological Association, Arnheim Award winner for Lifetime Accomplishment (Aesthetics, Creativity, and the Arts) and is on editorial boards of two journals. Her 2018 book, Everyday Creativity and the Healthy Mind: Dynamic New Paths for Self and Society, won a Silver Nautilus Award ("Better Books for a Better World"). Shan Guisinger is a researcher and clinician with 30 years of experience studying and treating eating disorders. She received her Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley and completed postdoctoral work at the Yale Eating Disorders Clinic. In her research and practice she seeks to understand how biological, psychological, and social factors interact in complex systems to create or ameliorate problems. She has taught her approach in the US and Italy. Shan has authored articles for Psychological Review and American Psychologist on evolution, anorexia, and interpersonal relatedness. Her treatment manual will be published by American Psychological Association Press in 2022.